-1
No, there are more irrational numbers between 1 and 2 than there are rational numbers.
Any one of the infinitely many proper fractions is a rational number between 1 and 0.
A rational number is any number that, when put into decimal form, terminates after a finite amount of digits OR begins to repeat the same pattern of digits. An easy way to find rational numbers is that any number that can be expressed in a fraction (1/2, 9/4, etc) of two integers.There is an infinite number of rational numbers between any two rational numbers. For example, say we have the numbers 1 and 2. What if you add them and divide by 2? Is that a rational number? Is it between 1 and 2? And to see that there is an infinite number of numbers between 1 and 2, take the number you just found, it is 3/2, now find a number between it and 2. You can keep doing this.
There are not THE five rational numbers between -2 and -1, there are an infinite number of them. -1.1, -1.01, -1.001, -1.000001 and -1.456798435854 are five possibilities.
Yes
The average of the two will be rational and it will be between them.
A rational number is a number that can be expressed as the ratio between two integers, so 5 and 6 and both rational themselves (5/1 and 6/1 respectively). As there is an infinite number of integers, there are an infinite number of rational numbers between 5 and 6, but an example is 5.5 (11/2).No, the number between 5 and 6 is Derf.haha
-1
No. If it is an integer then it is a whole number.
There is no "the" rational" number since there is an infinity of them. Start with the number halfway between the two: (1/10+1/11)/2 = 21/220. Then try halfway between 1/10 and 21/220, and then halfway between 1/10 and that on. And so on.
It is rational. It is a whole number so it cannot be irrational.
Yes, 1 over 2 is a rational number. A rational number is any number that can be expressed as a fraction where the numerator and denominator are both integers. In this case, 1 over 2 is the fraction 1/2, which meets the criteria of being a rational number.